The Characteristics and Ethics of Sham Surgeries: A Systematic Review of Randomized Controlled Trials.

MedStar author(s):
Citation: Annals of Surgery. 278(2):153-158, 2023 08 01.PMID: 37066793Department: MedStar Georgetown University Hospital/MedStar Washington Hospital Center | Plastic Surgery ResidencyForm of publication: Journal ArticleMedline article type(s): Journal ArticleSubject headings: *Endoscopy | *Research Design | Adult | Child | Humans | Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic | Year: 2023Local holdings: Available online through MWHC library: 1885 - present, Available in print through MWHC library: 1999 - 2006ISSN:
  • 0003-4932
Name of journal: Annals of surgeryAbstract: BACKGROUND: Innovative surgical procedures are often introduced to the clinical setting without the robust clinical trials performed for medicinal treatments. Sham surgeries serve as placebos by performing all steps of a surgical intervention aside from those deemed therapeutically necessary. Yet, sham trials are underutilized due ethical controversy.CONCLUSIONS: Our systematic review of 172 randomized, sham controlled trials highlights the ethical considerations that must be considered in these studies, namely the importance of transparent study design and objective outcome reporting, the difficulty of informed consent, and the inherent risks associated with surgical interventions. Copyright 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.METHODS: Ovid MEDLINE was queried through April 2022 with combinations of the Medical Subject (MeSH) headings and keywords including, but not limited to, "surgery", "endoscopy", "randomized controlled trial", and "sham procedure". Primary outcomes were surgical indications and characteristics, outcome measurements, and whether the investigational treatment was offered to the sham cohort.OBJECTIVE: To better characterize these ethical considerations, we sought to perform a large-scale systematic review across all sham-controlled studies currently present in the literature.RESULTS: One hundred and seventy-two articles fit our inclusion criteria, with gastrointestinal pathologies being the most common surgical indication. Participants , personnel, and outcome assessment were all blinded in 8.7% of trials (n=15). Study populations included adult subjects (age >=18) in 170 studies (98.8%), and two involved children. The most common level of dissection and type of anesthesia were deep (n=66, 38.4%) and general (n=49, 28.5%), respectively. An open surgical approach was utilized in 20.9% of studies (n=36). Primary outcomes were objective in 75 studies (43.6%), and subjective in 97 (56.4%), 62 of which employed validated outcome measures (36.0%). Four trials explicitly did not offer the surgery to the sham arm (2.3%), while 106 had no mention of whether the intervention was offered (61.6%).All authors: Berger LE, Dugdale LS, Hetzler PT 3rd, Huffman SS, Lee M, Park R, Song DHOriginally published: Original year of publication: 2023Fiscal year: Fiscal year of original publication: FY2023Digital Object Identifier:
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Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Journal Article MedStar Authors Catalog Article 37066793 Available 37066793

Available online through MWHC library: 1885 - present, Available in print through MWHC library: 1999 - 2006

BACKGROUND: Innovative surgical procedures are often introduced to the clinical setting without the robust clinical trials performed for medicinal treatments. Sham surgeries serve as placebos by performing all steps of a surgical intervention aside from those deemed therapeutically necessary. Yet, sham trials are underutilized due ethical controversy.

CONCLUSIONS: Our systematic review of 172 randomized, sham controlled trials highlights the ethical considerations that must be considered in these studies, namely the importance of transparent study design and objective outcome reporting, the difficulty of informed consent, and the inherent risks associated with surgical interventions. Copyright 2023 Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. All rights reserved.

METHODS: Ovid MEDLINE was queried through April 2022 with combinations of the Medical Subject (MeSH) headings and keywords including, but not limited to, "surgery", "endoscopy", "randomized controlled trial", and "sham procedure". Primary outcomes were surgical indications and characteristics, outcome measurements, and whether the investigational treatment was offered to the sham cohort.

OBJECTIVE: To better characterize these ethical considerations, we sought to perform a large-scale systematic review across all sham-controlled studies currently present in the literature.

RESULTS: One hundred and seventy-two articles fit our inclusion criteria, with gastrointestinal pathologies being the most common surgical indication. Participants , personnel, and outcome assessment were all blinded in 8.7% of trials (n=15). Study populations included adult subjects (age >=18) in 170 studies (98.8%), and two involved children. The most common level of dissection and type of anesthesia were deep (n=66, 38.4%) and general (n=49, 28.5%), respectively. An open surgical approach was utilized in 20.9% of studies (n=36). Primary outcomes were objective in 75 studies (43.6%), and subjective in 97 (56.4%), 62 of which employed validated outcome measures (36.0%). Four trials explicitly did not offer the surgery to the sham arm (2.3%), while 106 had no mention of whether the intervention was offered (61.6%).

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